Showing posts with label drawing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drawing. Show all posts

Saturday, February 24, 2018

'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF, part 1 - pages 1 thru 10


I decided to make a 30 page book/PDF that is a sensibly organized, brief distillation of the most important and useful principles (with practical examples) I've learned from the Western art tradition.


I would like to have had this much info in such a small package when I was younger, that's for sure!

My plan was - principles, plus practical examples, equals something useful.

Free download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Here's the first 10 pages:
Pages 11-20 click HERE
Pages 21-30 click HERE

It's filled with stuff which once I learned, made my figure drawing better. Free to download from storyboardsquad.com/links


Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - Download free at storyboardsquad.com/links

'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF, part 2 - pages 11 thu 20


I decided to make a 30 page book/PDF that is a sensibly organized, brief distillation of the most important and useful principles (with practical examples) I've learned from the Western art tradition.

I would like to have had this much info in such a small package when I was younger, that's for sure!

My plan was - principles, plus practical examples, equals something useful.

Free download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Here's the middle 10 pages:
Pages 1-10 click HERE
Pages 21-30 click HERE

It's filled with stuff which once I learned, made my figure drawing better. Free to download from storyboardsquad.com/links


Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF - free to download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Thursday, February 22, 2018

'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell' PDF, part 3 - pages 21 thru 30


I decided to make a 30 page book/PDF that is a sensibly organized, brief distillation of the most important and useful principles (with practical examples) I've learned from the Western art tradition.

I would like to have had this much info in such a small package when I was younger, that's for sure!

My plan was - principles, plus practical examples, equals something useful.

Free download at storyboardsquad.com/links

Here's the last 10 pages:
Pages 1-10 click HERE
Pages 11-20 click HERE

It's filled with stuff which once I learned, made my figure drawing better. Free to download from storyboardsquad.com/links

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Page from 'Constructive Figure Drawing in a Nutshell'

Friday, February 16, 2018

My quick pose figure drawing thought process...

It goes a bit like this making a 2 or 3 minute drawing from life:

Ooh, wow, great pose! Look at that arch and twist and the weight all over there and how great that shape is. Right, so that's the furthest big bit to the left, so if I put that there on my page, and make sure that's no bigger than half way across I should be OK fitting it all in. So there's my furthest point that way, that's where the foot goes. Legs going that way, long legs, couple of straight lines will do for now, hips going that way, ribs twisting this way, couple of straight perspective lines cover those directions, sternum, yup, a bit more space between hips and ribs than average, arms, head there, OK that's where everything's going to go, lets do those wonderful stretched bits. Oh, best do a quick double check, that's directly above that, that's right across from that, that overall area is square-ish, OK, that width matches that width, is that foreshortened part too long? Nope, all good, right, we are a GO for contours...
Look how far out that pelvic point sticks, nice, down the front of the thigh, around that, ooh, nice squish there, that comes in front of that, look how hard that is, I know that goes behind that but I can't see it in this light so I'll make sure I draw it anyway, back around, the weight's all on that side, now let's get that arch in there. Is that gap between those bits too big? Nope, weird negative shape there, but it's good, thank god! Oh, looks like she's lost some of her spring. Her ribs were facing a bit more that way and I couldn't see that part earlier. I won't draw what I see now, I'm sticking with what made me go 'wow'. I know that was facing more that way, now I've got this point in I can put those bits where I know they would be. Keep moving. I love how boldly that wedges into that and how softly that plane curves there. Sharp transition there, soft one there. That part is really straight. Ahh, look at that definition around there! How great is it to see that. That bone, that muscle, I wish I had 10 minutes on this one. What's next? OK, head: Put that there, connect those parts, they'll do for features, I bet I'm nearly out of time. Breasts. Let's get those breasts in. Falling over the ribs, middle third of the rib cage, glad I made the rib cage long enough for those pectorals and arm connections at the top.
BEEPBEEPBEEP NEXT POSE!
Shit, relaxed foot and calf not done, OK she's moved on. Shall I? Yeah, I'll just sling it in real quick here, I know how that goes, toes, that'll do. At least it's all drawn in now, dump that sheet of paper on the floor, OK what pose next? Oh WOW, look at that, OK, I'll have to turn my paper horizontal....etc etc

A couple of 3 minute figure drawings. Prismacolor pencil on paper.


Friday, December 15, 2017

John Watkiss figure drawing and anatomy demo sketches

When I took John's figure drawing classes he would, one person at a time, sit down and demonstrate concepts he was explaining, on each person's sheet of paper.
My friends and I would photocopy and share amongst ourselves our bits of scribbled wisdom.
I have now put them together in a YouTube video/slide show.
If improving figure drawing is your thing, I would suggest watching this at full screen and set the speed to .25 and use the space bar to pause and resume play a lot.
It's REALLY great stuff...

Sunday, December 10, 2017

60 quick pose figure drawings

Quick pose figure drawings (1-3 minutes per pose). If you can squeeze in some quick blocking, then a decent, lively contour, without missing head, hands or feet, you're on to a winner! All from live models during 20 minute sessions of either 1's, 2's or 3's (minute poses), followed by 10 minute breaks.
Gives the old gray matter a bit of a workout!

I'd suggest full screen on decent size monitor.


Sunday, February 12, 2012

What's the best advice you've ever received as an artist?

National Museum of Wildlife Art, Jackson, Wyoming.

I am honored and quite proud to say that the National Museum of Wildlife Art has invited me back to participate again in this year's Western Visions Miniatures and More show in Jackson, WY.

In their catalog they feature very brief quotes from all the artists in answer to a question.
One of this year's is 'What's the best advice you've ever received as an artist?'

It's difficult to pick just one, but I think I'll go with some advice I got from Harold Speed.
His two books were my constant companions for a few years when I lived in London just after college.

'The practice and science of drawing', and 'Oil painting techniques and materials'.

They are very beaten-up looking now, kind of like well used volumes of spells at Hogwart's, or recipes that have been in the family for generations.



They were written at a time when color printing was starting to make it much easier for art students to get their hands of reproductions of artists of any era from all over the world.
While this was obviously a great thing, Harold was a little concerned that there would be too great a temptation to flit from one genre to another without spending enough time to drink in deeply of any one before moving to the next, resulting in a kind of 'artistic indigestion'.

Gee, I wonder what he would make of the world now if he could pop back for a quick look around!

Well anyway, the piece of advice I took to heart was to avoid being distracted and instead spend a good deal of time soaking up the finest stuff that I was personally capable of honestly appreciating that inspired me, and pretty much let that be my guide and let the rest be, particularly while I was learning my way and developing my craft. After that you can enjoy numerous trips to the buffet table, having had time to develop a solid foundation and strong personal style.

I now need to get that last paragraph down to about 1/3 as long so I can send it in to Western Visions for my answer!

Since it's such a great question I'll ask you, what's the best advice you've ever received as an artist?
.......................................................................................
I've had bunches of emails entering my contest to win a Winged Angel Mouse, and there's still time before the end of the month to make a guess if you haven't yet, or mention it on your blog for the blog draw method of entry.
Details in the post before this one.






Click these links to visit my website... SteveWorthingtonArt.com - Sculpture that loves you back
or my Etsy store, CritterVille
.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Diner napkin scribble



What self respecting artist blog would be complete without some spontaneous napkin scribbles?
Here's someone else having breakfast at The Pantry here in Santa Fe.


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Click these links to visit my website... SteveWorthingtonArt.com - Sculpture that loves you back
or my Etsy store, CritterVille



.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Frog or duck?

I doodled a frog on a napkin for no particular reason the other day.
I must have done this scribble a million times growing up. It's practically a reflex action.
Duck?

Meridee picked it up and said 'oh, what a cute little duck'.
Duck?
I looked at it again.
Duck?
The more I told her it was a frog, the more insistent she was that it's a duck.

Perhaps Meridee was losing her marbles.

Of course when she showed me the duck, and I showed her the frog,  we realized it's simply a matter of how you look at it!
Duck

Then she said it had kind of Linus hair, which I liked since Linus was always my favorite Peanuts character.


Click these links to visit my website... SteveWorthingtonArt.com - Sculpture that loves you back
or my Etsy store, CritterVille

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Animal sketches made for sculptures

Bit of a quick post this week.
Just a handful of animal scribbles I've made at various times for working from:
mainly bits and pieces that caught my attention I didn't want to forget.

I got a bunch of spectacular pics of Sprightly in Antarctica this last week, so I'll be posting them soon.
I don't think the mice need any introduction.
This was my old room-mate's puppy, Kahlua the chocolate lab. I almost became a sculptor when I got stuck into making a model of him out of Sculpey probably back in 1998, but it got broken and I never finished it.
It would be several years later before I got my hands on some clay and the sculpting bug finally got a hold of me!
This is my tree frog. I've got a few more ideas to do with tree frogs right now.
These are some macaque expressions and hairstyle studies I made for my monkey/turtle discus thrower.
Grumpy old toads.

My website... SteveWorthingtonArt.com - Sculpture that loves you back
My Etsy store, CritterVille

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Orson Welles with a paint brush: The impact of meeting the amazing John Watkiss-part 2 of 3









London's sooty brown and grey buildings wore golden halos in the long summer evenings.
Patches of pavement would swarm with happy crowds of standing drinkers marking the locations of pubs, like bees densely gathered around the entrances to hives.

It was a magical time for me, full of hope and excitement of what the future might hold.
In the narrow streets of Soho was a doorway in a building on Great Marlborough Street that was just like any other, but twenty years on the impact of what lay beyond is still with me.
It's as vivid now as it was when I climbed the narrow stairs, worked my way through some offices and stood in front a small, innocuous door.
An intense character ushered me inside.
Lighthearted one second, deadly serious the next, the twenty seven year old artist had something of the 1960's pop star about him, with his immaculate tight fitting suit, narrow tie and shiny beatle boots.

The room had few windows, but light seemed to pour in from everywhere.
I looked around in an attempt to take in the experience.
The walls were festooned with red chalk drawings of nudes, and anatomical studies, and sketches in oil.

Straight onto the wall. No fumbling around, no second chances, just confident, joyful expressions of life glowing all around me. You could have told me Leonardo had returned and drawn them and I would have believed you.
Draped figures and nudes glowed with life. If they weren't painted straight onto the wall I would easily have believed they'd been stolen from the National Gallery.
The pics below are a couple of random samples of John's handiwork, since I don't have pics of the old Magic Box studio...

At one end the whole wall opened up on a utopian scene of native people collecting and carrying baskets of all kinds of fruit. Behind them a lush valley stretched out beyond, inviting you to join them in their idyllic existence.
I looked up and saw cherubs floating about the ceiling, ascending toward the heavens.

Two guys about my age, or a bit older, were drawing figures and anatomical studies.
Not as good as the stuff on the walls, but honest and enviably fine none the less.

Propped up on a radiator was a stolen Frans Hals portrait, with its fresh, vigorous brushstrokes, a bit like the laughing cavalier.
Until I learned it had been painted that morning while waiting for a job to arrive.



And then the drawers were opened.
Out came great sheets of wonder.
There were pastel paintings of shirtless workers and fruit gatherers, the light catching large forms and intricate details.
There were watercolors of country scenes serene and subtle in their muted tones.
Cityscapes of greys, each with its own mood. There was drama and nuance of every kind here.

Out came a very large sheet with a detailed drawing of a man artfully posed, but without his skin on. It was a spectacular anatomical drawing that took my breath away. You could follow the muscles of the forearms down to their tendons, and see how they passed through splits in other tendons of the fingers to terminate in their attachments at the farthest tiny bones of the fingers.
And it was the same across the whole body. Muscles, tendons, bones and cartilage drawn with intricate detail and accuracy.

He asked me with obvious pleasure if this wasn't what I expected to find in a storyboard studio.

My mind was reeling. I asked him where his models would stand while he painted and drew all these marvelous things.

The other guys lowered their pencils and looked over while John delivered the bomb that could mess with a person's head forever.
'Oh, I just make them all up.'

My jaw dropped visibly. Clearly I wasn't the first person that happened to, and they all seemed to enjoy the reaction.

'But, like that one,' I asked, pointing to a difficultly foreshortened pose, 'with such an unusual angle, how can you draw that without looking? You must have a photo at least?'

'Nope. Just what's in here.' he said, tapping what was clearly no ordinary head.

I must have seemed doubtful, because at that moment he sat down and grabbed a pen and I watched it magically dance across a sheet of paper leaving pure magic behind. The pen tip traced patterns in the air just above the surface, leaving just a few scattered dots on the page.
Then a few straight lines appeared, then organic curving contours, each one driven to its destination with forceful conviction.
It became a torso, twisted and stretching upwards, but I knew it had become visible on the paper to John the moment he picked up his pen.

Then he flipped the page and did another.
Then a head. Then a head from a very awkward angle. The kind of angle it would be hard to get right even if you were staring a model in the face.

After the first couple, done in silence to deepen the impact, John explained as he drew a couple more.
'See, these dots lie on each side of the frontal bones, these on the zygomatic arches, and these trace a line down the front of the face highlighting only key points you refer to when you're doing these parts here, for instance. And then you simply connect these points, being careful to observe this curve here, which always travels in this direction, and these planes which must always remain exactly the same relative to these points here...'

And so it went on.

'And this knowledge is what makes it possible to draw these storyboards of women climbing about on rocks, from all these interesting angles and viewpoints, without getting bogged down with hunting for, or being limited by a lack of the right photo reference. You can be quick and efficient. All you need is to be armed with the right knowledge.
You can be fast and sure, but acquiring this knowledge takes time.'

I was stunned. Speechless. My mind had very clearly been blown. Something that happened quite regularly in this little room on Great Marlborough Street I was certain.
In a few minutes I had not only learned more, but I'd been left more inspired than from all four years of art school.
Not one teacher had ever once picked up a pencil and demonstrated anything.
What they offered was vague and nebulous encouragement for any enthusiasm you had.
But certainly no sense of direction.

Now I'd learned that knowledge was the key. With it you could do great things.
And I was hungry to learn.

John looked over my work diagnostically, told me what to forget about and gave me a few pointers to work on first, then I'd come back and he'd see how I did, and take it from there.

Forget about finish - focus on structure. Learn it, and learn it well.

Wow.

What an opportunity. I was going to soak up as much as I could. I made it my business never to be told the same thing twice, while I thoroughly absorbed every word of advice that came my way.

I wasn't sure how far I could take this with my normal sized brain, but I was determined to find out.


Friday, May 23, 2008

More Mousey 'how it's done'



I suppose if the final bronze is the birth of Nosey mouse, this is more like the conception.
My main man Miles at Anderson Enterprise will be emailing a few more pics of Noseys in progress which I'll be adding to the previous post as they come in (just added de-molding pics), so for now here are a bunch of studies I made from the pet mice I had at the time. I made several pages to familiarize myself with certain key shapes I wanted to accentuate in my finished critters.
Click here for my sculpture website